Adam We
University of Ulm
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Featured researches published by Adam We.
Heart | 1988
Siegfried Wieshammer; Fritz S. Keck; Josef Waitzinger; J. Kohler; Adam We; Martin Stauch; E.F. Pfeiffer
The effect of hypothyroidism on left ventricular function at rest and during exercise was studied in nine patients without demonstrable cardiovascular disease who had had total thyroidectomy and ablative radioiodine treatment for thyroid cancer. Radionuclide ventriculography and simultaneous right heart catheterisation were performed while the patients were hypothyroid two weeks after stopping triiodothyronine treatment (to permit routine screening for metastases) and while they were euthyroid on thyroxine replacement treatment. When the patients were hypothyroid, cardiac output, stroke volume, and end diastolic volume at rest were all lower and peripheral resistance was higher than when they were euthyroid. Pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, right atrial pressure, heart rate, left ventricular ejection fraction, and the systolic pressure:volume relation of the left ventricle, which was used as an estimate of the contractile state, were not significantly different when the patients were hypothyroid or euthyroid. During exercise, heart rate, cardiac output, end diastolic volume, and stroke volume were higher when the patients were euthyroid than when they were hypothyroid. Again, pulmonary capillary wedge pressure, ejection fraction, and the systolic pressure:volume relation were similar in both thyroid states. The data suggest that the alterations in cardiac performance seen in short term hypothyroidism are primarily related to changes in loading conditions and exercise heart rate; they do not suggest that acute thyroid hormone deficiency has a major effect on the contractile properties of the myocardium.
Journal of Molecular Medicine | 1985
H. Seibold; E. Henze; J. Kohler; J. Roth; A. Schmidt; Adam We
SummarySimultaneous right heart catheterization and radionuclide ventriculography were performed in 27 patients with a wide range of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. Central hemodynamics and radionuclide studies were done at rest and during exercise. In the resting state the right ventricular ejection fraction (RVEF) was in the normal range (43.3±6%). During exercise a significant (p<0.001) decrease of RVEF to 38.8±6.7% occurred. The pumonary artery mean pressures were 19.9±3.8 at rest. During exercise a significant (p<0.001) increase to 41±9.8 mm Hg occurred. There was a linear relationship between pulmonary pressures and RVEF during exercise in patients with pulmonary artery pressures not exceeding 35 mm Hg. In patients with right ventricular end-diastolic wall thickness ≧6 mm a curvilinear relationship between these parameters could be observed with a flattening of the curve at higher pressures (>35 mm Hg) and lower ejection fractions (<35% RVEF). Radionuclide venticulography cannot substitute for right heart catheterization. Echocardiography is useful for interpretation of right ventricular ejection fractions in advanced chronic obstructive pulmonary disease.
Heart | 1985
Siegfried Wieshammer; C. Delagardelle; Sigel H; E. Henze; Kress P; Bitter F; R Lippert; H. Seibold; Adam We; Martin Stauch
A consecutive series of 56 patients with chest pain but no evidence of previous myocardial infarction was prospectively studied by radionuclide ventriculography to determine the value of global and regional radionuclide indices in detecting coronary artery disease. The results were correlated with the clinical judgment of chest pain, the results of the exercise electrocardiogram, and the right heart haemodynamic measurements during exercise. As a result of the criteria for entry, the study group was representative of the population seen in such a clinical setting. Only 25% of patients had coronary artery disease. The predictive power of radionuclide ventriculography was limited. The conventionally used criterion that normal subjects have an increase in left ventricular ejection fraction of at least 5% with exercise provided only 78% sensitivity and 57% specificity. Fourier analysis and visual interpretation of radionuclide studies wrongly diagnosed three out of 10 patients with extensive disease requiring surgery. These results suggest that radionuclide ventriculography is of limited value in the non-invasive diagnosis of coronary artery disease.
Heart | 1993
P Weismüller; M Clausen; R Weller; P Richter; J Steinmann; E. Henze; I Dormehl; M Kochs; Adam We; Vinzenz Hombach
A new tomographic technique combined with phase analysis was used to detect premature and ectopic ventricular contraction patterns in 15 patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome and during ventricular tachycardia in seven patients. Data generated by gated single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) were analysed by backprojection of the Fourier coefficients, double-angulation, and integration to thick slices containing the ventricles, thus allowing visualisation of the contraction patterns in three perpendicular views. The results were compared with those of catheter mapping. In nine patients with Wolff-Parkinson-White syndrome the site of initial contraction detected was identical with the site of the accessory pathway found by catheter mapping. The sites of origin of the ventricular tachycardias determined by catheter mapping were within 3 cm of the sites detected by the new technique. This new technique seems to be a promising non-invasive method for localising ectopic ventricular activity that will considerably shorten the time required for subsequent invasive procedures.
Journal of Molecular Medicine | 1987
Siegfried Wieshammer; C. Delagardelle; Sigel H; E. Henze; Kress P; Fritz S. Keck; Adam We; Martin Stauch
SummaryA series of 13 patients with significant coronary stenoses but without prior myocardial infarction were simultaneously studied by right heart catheterization and radionuclide ventriculography to determine the extent to which abnormal responses in left ventricular ejection fraction and wall motion to maximum exercise are paralleled by abnormal left ventricular filling pressures. The correlations of the filling pressure as evaluated by the diastolic pulmonary artery pressure with both the exercise ejection fraction and the rest-to-exercise change in ejection fraction were high (r=−0.89,P<0.01 andr=−0.76,P<0.01, respectively). In addition, the filling-pressure response to stress separated the patients into distinct radionuclide categories. All the 7 patients with grossly abnormal filling pressures (P≥30 mmHg) developed regional wall motion abnormalities with exercise as evaluated by visual interpretation or quantitative phase analysis. These patients also had a decrease in ejection fraction from rest to exercise ranging from −9% to −32% together with an exercise ejection fraction below 50%. Conversely, these abnormalities were never found in patients with filling pressures below this threshold level. The data suggest that radionuclide ventriculography and measurement of left ventricular filling pressure with exercise yield corresponding results when assessing the functional significance of coronary stenoses in normotensive patients without prior myocardial infarction and normal global left ventricular function at rest.
European Heart Journal | 1987
Martin Stauch; G. Grossmann; A. Schmidt; P. Richter; J. Waitzinger; D. Wanjura; Adam We; W. König
European Heart Journal | 1986
Siegfried Wieshammer; C. Delagardelle; Sigel H; E. Henze; Kress P; Bitter F; Adam We; Martin Stauch
Zeitschrift Fur Kardiologie | 1977
Adam We; Sigel H; Geffers H; Kampmann H; Bitter F; Martin Stauch
Zeitschrift Fur Kardiologie | 1976
Geffers H; Sigel H; Bitter F; Kampmann H; Martin Stauch; Adam We
European Heart Journal | 1993
M. Clausen; P. Weismüller; R. Weller; Adam We; E. Henze